Hi all,
Long story short, I booped a parking lot dirt and woodchip berm just hard enough to give my bumper an accidental tuck - still getting used to my short shifter and I somehow managed to put her in first rather than reverse (in my defense I'm new at manual in general). I did a thorough inspection afterwards and to my relief, there's no permanent damage. Radiator and hood are all in perfectly fine position, no panel line changes, valance normal, no stickiness or resistance for doors or hood hinges, no leaks that didn't exist already, no visible chassis damage, no skewing when rolling, the fans clear the radiator, grilles are aligned, headlights and foglights are fine, oil cooler is fine. Nothing is visibly bent outside of my plastic front plate surround (amazingly, none of the plastic has so much as a crack in it). The diving boards did their job magnificently, I shudder to think of how many hundreds of bucks I'd be out to fix this if I had plastics or euros.
I found the factory spec for the bumper shocks that specify "Distance A" - the measurement between the vertical mounting tube bit for the bumper support bracket tab things, and the flat plate bit that's perpendicular to the main shock body - should be 52mm plus or minus 1mm or else they should be replaced. I intend to remove my bumper and check that the measurement is proper. I was under the impression diving boards should pop back out after an under 5mph impact (which this was, into a soft material no less), but despite the fact my shocks aren't drilled the bumper seems to be stuck in the back/tucked position. If they're still 52mm+-1, is there a best practice to pull them back out? I suspect that they're just stuck due to age.
I'm not too concerned because the chassis and all the other parts seem totally unharmed, but as a certified diving board defense squad member I just wanna put 'em back to how they're supposed to be. New ones are NLA obviously, but I'm willing to recondition a set if there's a way to that isn't a total nightmare. Any pointers or is it just a matter of some lubrication and a really hard yank? I'd rather not buy a new pair if I don't have to, but I will if that's my only option. The PN for my car seems to be 51111971852 or 51111911296, i.e. the symmetrical ones rather than the left and right versions '87 and earlier had if I'm not mistaken.
Thanks.
Long story short, I booped a parking lot dirt and woodchip berm just hard enough to give my bumper an accidental tuck - still getting used to my short shifter and I somehow managed to put her in first rather than reverse (in my defense I'm new at manual in general). I did a thorough inspection afterwards and to my relief, there's no permanent damage. Radiator and hood are all in perfectly fine position, no panel line changes, valance normal, no stickiness or resistance for doors or hood hinges, no leaks that didn't exist already, no visible chassis damage, no skewing when rolling, the fans clear the radiator, grilles are aligned, headlights and foglights are fine, oil cooler is fine. Nothing is visibly bent outside of my plastic front plate surround (amazingly, none of the plastic has so much as a crack in it). The diving boards did their job magnificently, I shudder to think of how many hundreds of bucks I'd be out to fix this if I had plastics or euros.
I found the factory spec for the bumper shocks that specify "Distance A" - the measurement between the vertical mounting tube bit for the bumper support bracket tab things, and the flat plate bit that's perpendicular to the main shock body - should be 52mm plus or minus 1mm or else they should be replaced. I intend to remove my bumper and check that the measurement is proper. I was under the impression diving boards should pop back out after an under 5mph impact (which this was, into a soft material no less), but despite the fact my shocks aren't drilled the bumper seems to be stuck in the back/tucked position. If they're still 52mm+-1, is there a best practice to pull them back out? I suspect that they're just stuck due to age.
I'm not too concerned because the chassis and all the other parts seem totally unharmed, but as a certified diving board defense squad member I just wanna put 'em back to how they're supposed to be. New ones are NLA obviously, but I'm willing to recondition a set if there's a way to that isn't a total nightmare. Any pointers or is it just a matter of some lubrication and a really hard yank? I'd rather not buy a new pair if I don't have to, but I will if that's my only option. The PN for my car seems to be 51111971852 or 51111911296, i.e. the symmetrical ones rather than the left and right versions '87 and earlier had if I'm not mistaken.
Thanks.
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